Sellers v. Kurdilla

377 P.3d 33
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 2016
Docket7116 S-15685
StatusPublished

This text of 377 P.3d 33 (Sellers v. Kurdilla) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sellers v. Kurdilla, 377 P.3d 33 (Ala. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

MAASSEN, Justice.

I. INTRQDUCTION

. Several men were in a car that rear-ended the plaintiff's vehicle, The plaintiff sued the car's owner, believing he had been driving. The car's owner moved to dismiss the lawsuit on the basis of an affidavit from a second man, who claimed he was driving at the time of the accident. The plaintiff amended her complaint to name both men. The second man then moved to dismiss the claim against him, arguing that under Alaska Civil Rule 15(c) the plaintiffs amended complaint did not relate back to the date of her initial filing and the claim was therefore barred by the statute of limitations. The district court agreed and dismissed the claim. The plaintiff proceeded to trial against the car's owner, who defended on grounds that he had not been driving. The jury found against the plaintiff, who then appealed to the superior court, arguing that the district court erred when it dismissed her claim against the see-ond man,. The superior court affirmed the district court's decision.

We granted review. We conclude that the plaintiffs amended complaint met the requirements for relation back under Rule 15(c), and we therefore reverse the superior court's decision.

II, FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Linda Sellers's car was rear-ended by a Dodge Durango. on January 4, 2010. The Durango carried at least three men, including the owner, Stephan Kurdilla, and Daniel Stroud. Sellers later attested by affidavit that the Durango's driver approached her vehicle, identified himself as Stephan Kurdil-la, and gave her an insurance identification card with Kurdilla's name on it. She attested that she. copied down the information from the card, Her passenger, Bonnie Largen, affirmed in her affidavit that she saw the Durango's driver hand Sellers an insurance identification card, heard Sellers identify the driver as Kurdilla, and saw her copy down the information from the card. The police did not respond to the seene of the accident but *5 instead had Sellers file a crash report, in which she identified Kurdilla as the Duran, go's driver,.

On January 11, 2010, State Farm mailed a claim acknowledgment notice which identified "Our Insured" as Daniel Stroud. But in its seven subsequent letters spanning January to July, State Farm identified “Our Insured" as Stephan Kurdilla,

In June 2010, attorney Michael Stepovich notified State Farm that he represented Sellers "in regard to injuries she sustained in a rear-ending by your insured"; in his letter he named Kurdilla as "Your Insured." State Farm replied on July 30, this time identifying "Our Insured" as Stroud. Its next two letters identified Kurdilla as its insured; its next two named Stroud; and the two after that again named Kurdilla, All in all, State Farm identified Kurdilla as its insured eleven times and Stroud four times in its correspondence with Stepovieh.

B. , Proceedings

On January 4, 2012, the last day before the statute of limitations expired, Sellers filed a complaint naming Kurdilla as the defendant and alleging that he had been driving the Durango at the time of the accident. 1 Sellers had difficulty locating Kurdilla for service of process, and State Farm declined to accept service on his behalf, On April 6, 2012, Sellers filed an affidavit of due diligence and a motion for leave to serve Kurdilla by publication, which the court granted on April 16. Sellers published the required notice four times in May and sent a certified copy to Fort Wainwright, where Kurdilla had been stationed. Eventually Kurdilla was served at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, on May 11, 2012.

Michael Kramer, the attorney State Farm retained to represent Kurdilla, later attested by affidavit that Kurdilla called him on May 16, 2012, and told him that Stroud was the driver and that he (Kurdilla) had called Ste-povich earlier that day with Stroud's contact information. Stepovich, however, disputes having received such a call from Kurdilla; he contends that it was not until a few months later, when Kurdilla filed a motion to dismiss the case, that Sellers first had notice that Stroud claimed to be the driver.

Kramer filed his entry of appearance on Kurdilla's behalf on June 1. On August 16 Kurdilla filed a motion to dismiss supported by a two-line affidavit from Stroud asserting that he, Stroud, had been driving at the time of the accident. Sellers opposed the motion to dismiss and filed an amended complaint that added "and/or Daniel Stroud" to the allegations of driver negligence, Sellers also moved for a continuance pursuant to Alaska Civil Rule 56(f) so that she could investigate whether Stroud was indeed the driver and whether he and Kurdilla had colluded to hide the driver's identity.

Stroud, also represented by Kramer, then filed a motion to dismiss the new claim against him on the grounds that Kurdilla's phone call to Stepovich, together with State Farm's letters, had put Sellers on early. notice that Stroud was actually the driver and that the statute of limitations on a claim against him had now expired. Stroud also directly disputed Sellers's description of the relevant events by attesting in a supporting affidavit that at the time of the collision both he and Kurdilla approached Sellers's car, that Kurdilla "gave her his insurance card and clearly identified himself as the owner of the vehicle, and [that] [Stroud] clearly identified [himjself as the driver of the vehicle."

1. District court proceedings

'The district court denied Kurdilla's motion to dismiss, finding that there was a question of material fact as to whether he had been driving the Durango. But the court granted Stroud's motion to dismiss the claiin against him, finding that State Farm's first letter to Sellers in January 2010-one of the four that identified Stroud as the company's insured-should "have put [Sellers] on notice of a duty to investigate as to a possible second driver, and that would be sufficient for the statute of limitations argument that's being made in *6 [this] case." The court also denied Sellers's Rule 56(f) motion seeking a continuance to conduct more discovery. ~

The claim against Kurdilla proceeded to trial. Kurdilla presented testimony-his own, Stroud's, and that of another passenger in the car-that Stroud, not he, was driving at the time of the accident, and the jury returned a defense verdict. Sellers appealed to the superior court, arguing that the district court erred by dismissing her claim against Stroud and by denying her motion for a Rule 56(f) continuance.

2, Superior court appeal

On appeal, the superior court analyzed Rule 15 and concluded that there was no identity of interest between Kurdilla and Stroud that would allow Kurdilla's knowledge of the lawsuit to extend Sellers's time for bringing a claim against Stroud. The court noted that "Stroud and State Farm presumably have an identity of interest," but it concluded that Sellers had abandoned any argument based on that relationship,.

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Bluebook (online)
377 P.3d 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sellers-v-kurdilla-alaska-2016.